Tag Archives: Social

The Social Sciences in Crisis

An old and familiar issue that has confronted the social sciences is the question of utility and practical contribution to the state of  Philippine education in general, and in particular to other academic disciplines, such  as agriculture. The month of November 1983 was a particularly challenging one. For the first time in many years, the social sciences was called to account for their role and contribution to the field of general education. Social scientists were asked to pause from teaching and other occupational activities so as to be able to assess their work, re-think directions, and the effectiveness of their academic pursuits.

The Social Scientists at U.P. Los Baños (UPLB) produces a commission report early in September which underscored the state of the social sciences at UPLB. The report depicted the U.P. social science faculty as “second class” citizens in the academic community. It made inquiries into the status, needs, and problems of the social sciences in such areas as academic programs, faculty competence, research activities and output, and extended the investigations to the larger issues that concern the social sciences.

The report noted among other things, that inspite of the academic competence of its staff, social science researches are conducted as a “free-wheeling venture” with no theoretical focus, research directions, or a research theme. The state of affairs presently obtaining in social science at UPLB is hardly conducive to a systematic development of an empirically based knowledge.

Philippine Social Science Education and Research for Agriculture Conference

The above report was one of the papers discussed in the conference on Social Science Education and Research For Agriculture held at UPLB last November 11-12, 1983. The conference was attended by representatives of college and university administration, international assistance agencies, officials from government agencies in agriculture and other ministries. The talks explored a possible prognosis for Philippine social science in the immediate future.

The paper of Edgardo Quisumbing, Director of the Agricultural Research Office of  the Ministry of Agriculture appeared to agree the UPLB critique of social science researches, in particular those related to agriculture. Dr. Quisumbing pointed out that with the exception of Agricultural Economics, other fields in the social sciences have contributed very little towards helping the Ministry of Agriculture design more efficient and effective agricultural programs. Among his observations was that the problem seems to be that the output of social scientists in general have failed to focus on the social environment of farmers. Philippine social scientists have yet to develop a theoretical system about the nature and dynamics of the agricultural environment.

Fr. Antonio Ledesma, S.J., representing the university sector, presented a paper on the status of social science education and research at Xavier University in which he identified certain constraints be setting social science researches in his area: delineating trade-offs between teaching and research, limited research resources and lack of linkages with other research centers.

The presentations of the foreign or assistance agencies dwelt on the role of the particular agency in supporting social science research and education. The U.S. Agency For International Development (AID) stressed its support for the training of social scientists in agricultural disciplines. Although the assistance is not directly made to colleges and universities, a new program will soon provide additional support to the social sciences.

The Rainfed Resources Development Program is designed to introduce certain changes in the old scheme of assistance. It will provide grants to agricultural institutions, colleges and universities, and research organizations. Training, both on the M.A. as well as Ph.D. levels, will most likely be an important component of the program.

Similarly, the Philippine Council for Agriculture, Resources Research, and Development (PCARRD) has been mainly involved in supporting the training for university based social scientists working on agricultural issues. PCARRD undertakes a manpower development program for upgrading the research capability of the national research network. About 50% of its fellowships was awarded to colleges and universities. PCARRD manpower development program encompasses a network that includes member colleges and universities. It admitted however, that grants for the social sciences constituted only a very small portion of its budget.

The First National Social Science Congress

The seminar at UPLB paved the way for an important milestone in the history of social science disciplines in the Philippines. The First National Social Science Congress was auspiciously held in the newly constructed Philippine Social Science Center building in Diliman. The date on which it was held pertained to a period of crises that highlighted the role that social science should play given the socioeconomic and political problems that presently plague the country.

The Keynote Speech of Edgardo J. Angara, President of the U.P. did not see the social science as performing its role effectively. Angara chided the social sciences for having been caught flat-footed in the present crisis.

   … the frantic guessing that is now going on shows that the crisis caught the social sciences flat-footed… The economists were apparently not monitoring economic trends because what we see now are the results of long-term trends. Equally oblivious.. were the political scientists. The social scientists are either gawking at events or are only now beginning to see how irrelevant their old lines of inquiry have become.

Angara challenged social scientists not only to add to the objective knowledge of reality but to confront the moral suggestion of programmatic action. The social scientists must henceforth use their expertise to perform their obligations as citizens.

One of  the answers to the above challenge came from economics. A paper on “Contemporary Science, Policies, and Programs” prepared by Alejandro M. Herrin evaluated the output of social science researches. Among the significant findings of the study was the fact that during the past ten years, social science research has been preoccupied with the evaluation of government programs and the assessment of the relationships between public policy instruments and policy objectives, at the expense of discipline-centered researches, not to mention theoretical studies. One of the more serious objection to contracted research is that it can undermine research quality since the resulting work is reviewed only by the end-user or the particular funding agency involved. Researches as scholarly pursuits need to be reviewed by academic peers, a practice that has ensured the high quality of scholarly work. A more serious problem is the restriction of research topics only to those identified by funding agencies.

On the other hand, the same paper noted the niggardly support that the social sciences are getting as compared to other disciplines like the natural sciences. Consequently, the study suggested that the government take the view that the mandate of the social sciences is much broader than simply responding to government-sponsored research programs. Social scientists must be free to examine social problems, formulate issues, and suggest a research strategy for a deeper understanding of these issues.

In the workshops that followed, the participants subjected these problems to further discussion, thus heightening their urgency. At the end, the workshops produced resolutions and recommendations some of which are the following:

1. Philippine social sciences should involve themselves in the resolution and alleviation of social issues and assume the role of social critic in addition to its primary concern of generating and transmitting knowledge.
2. Social Science disciplines should be indigenized and participatory research encouraged to develop a true “peoples’ science” based on popular perceptions and rooted in the collective indigenous experience.
3. The Social Sciences should have a code of ethics.
4. Research concerns for the next few years should be identified.

The 9th Congress of the IAHA

A truly multi-disciplinary gathering of social scientists was the 9th Congress of the International Association of Historians of Asia (IAHA) held in Diliman last November 21-25, 1983. Those attending included not only Asian practitioners of the craft of history but also social scientists from the USSR, Germany, France, the United Kingdom, and other western nations. The range of topics offered a wide prism of interest such as Historiography, Asian Archeology and Prehistory, local History, as well as topics of current concern like Population Issues.

The Congress proper lasted for three days during which more than a hundred papers were read, reviewed, and criticized by peers from various disciplines. As in most congresses of this scale, papers were presented simultaneously in six different conferences or workshop rooms, so that the participants and observers were allowed only a fragment of the total presentations and discussions. On the average, a participant could only attend six sessions including the one in which he must present his own paper. This account therefore can only render comments on the few presentations that the author personally attended.

A paper on the “Intelligentsia’s Role in the Post-Colonial Societies of Asia” by Vlademir Li of the Institute of Oriental Studies of the Academy of Science of the USSR presented a comprehensive interdisciplinary study of the post-war role of the intelligentsia in Africa and Asia. While maintaining the primacy of the role of the working class in the revolutionary struggle, the study pointed out the intelligentsias of Asia and Africa are increasingly performing a significant part in it.

The post-war intelligentsia is defined as that mass of medium and lower groups that have emerged “at the crossroads of the colonized autochthonous (non-European) and the colonizing European elements.” The history of the intelligentsia is seen as having undergone two stages: the period of the anti-colonial struggle, and the period after winning independence. At the initial stage, the intelligentsia acted as a political representative of a broad coalition of social classes interested in the liquidation of the colonial domination. In the second stage, its political role changed, and it began to speak for individual classes and interest groups.

The most important function attributed to the intelligentsia is the spread of revolutionary consciousness among the masses. Another basic function is to provide ideological backing for the national liberation movement. Among its main spheres of action is the cultural sphere where the intelligentsia of Asian and African countries address themselves to the tasks of cultural transformation. The intelligentsia is asked to merge with the progressive social forces for the choice of an advanced ideology.

A paper on “The Historical Perspectives of a Malay Urban Village” by Mohammed Aris Hj. Otham advocated the maintenance of traditional institutions as a way of preserving one’s identity in a heterogeneous urban community. Traditional institutions help recreate rural life in the cities and the preservation of rural values such as the spirit of communalism is held to be a good balance to the impersonalism of modern societies. The study however, poses a question as to what extent such a balance between tradition and modernization can be maintained.

Wilfred Wagner’s “Some Preliminary Remarks on the Social History of Mentawai (West Sumatra/ Indonesia)” is a study on the impact of modernization on a historical society. Wagner’s preliminary observations reveals that among the institutions of Mentawai that have given way to change is the traditional animistic religion. Likewise, the mode of production as well as crops produced have changed, along with the indigenous distributions and exchange systems. The question that remains to be asked is whether modernization has resulted in a better quality of life for the people of Mentawai.

A Phenomenological Reflection on Social Reality and Change

The mission statement of the Ateneo de Davao University states that “it preserves, cherishes, and develops the values and convictions of the Filipino culture in an involvement with the local community, and in a commitment to the challenges of nation building.” In response to this an increasing number of students of the different curricular and extra-curricular clubs and organizations are now actively becoming involved with poor communities in Davao City. The Social Involvement and Coordination Office (SICO) is one of the important agencies of the university that facilities the students’ involvement. It helps the university make its social involvement programs successful.

Philosophy shows that the process of organizing and transforming society must consider the role of human subjectivity. People should be involved in decision-making about their own lives. In the final analysis, social transformation can be truly authentic if the social members themselves determine their destiny.

It is hopes that the present essay will be a fruitful contribution to the many sets of materials and documents already being read and studied by students. Likewise, this essay can help towards adding material to groups and organizations even outside the University.

Man Reduced to a Thing

The students are aware that a very huge percentage of Philippine capital and resources are not in the hands of the majority of Filipinos. The political laws have not been supportive of the needs of many. Education, to name a cultural dimension, is not really “educating” everyone. The students after their structural analysis mention that Philippine economics, politics, and culture are not supportive of the great majority, especially the poor. People. especially the poor, are not given the opportunity to define how they are to live in a more humane way. What has been happening is that experts design theories and policies for social restructuring without prior consultation with the people concerned.

The experts make the theories, policy-makers actualize them. The presupposition is that the lives and ways of people cannot be the basis for the theoretical  constructs for change and development. It is believed that the criteria of the experts are more reliable in determining how people should live. Social change is implemented without considering what the people themselves have to say. There are two terms that can be helpful in the philosophic analysis. The first is the word “subjective”. This has often been understood as that which refers to the personal, the idiosyncratic, and the vague. The other word is “objective” , which often has been understood as that which is faithful to the “facts-in-themselves”. The objective is what is enduring, such as the facts that are open to rigorous and systematic inquiry. To be subjective in one’s interpretations is to be unsure and imprecise. To be objective is to be correct and precise. Hence, the subjective, employing its realm of values and meanings, is said to belong to people’s interpretations of their situations, while the objective is the way of the scientific experts.

the experts’ scientific interpretations are believed to be much more valid than peoples’ interpretations. Hence, the criteria for social change and development are in the hands of the scientific experts, since they are objective in their formulations. The subjectives lives of social members, to be properly organized, must be subservient to the valid and reliable designs of the experts. It does appear therefore, that the peoples’ right to define their social lives can be denied in the name of scientific objectivity. Thus people have been reduced to objects. This is what is taking place in many programs for development, e.g., housing, industrialization, and infrastructure.

It is incorrect to assume that people can go on with their daily lives relying on the experts to do the thinking and deciding for them. It is also incorrect to think that only the experts know, while everyone else does not. People will have to decide with what to do with their lives. They should be involved in designing what for them is the viable way of living. It is imperative to criticize the assumption that the subjective ways of the people are not at part with the objective constructs of the experts, especially the foreign experts. Two points can show why.

First, it is questionable if the set of criteria are really as objective as defined. It is believed that for experts to be objective they must be without values and meanings that color their interpretations. An entirely value-free science is today in dispute, and it is doubtful if experts can really cease from holding on to any value at all. One moralist looking into the relations between economics and ethics pointed out that the criteria purported to be without value coloring are really normative concepts and beliefs prescribing how people must live economic lives. The economics are not entirely scientific since they show that they are also ideological. Another observer noted that for a very long time many experts could not agree on the most objective criteria for correct social living. Hence, there grew to be as many criteria as there were scholars and thinkers. That is why it has become questionable if the constructed criteria are really faithful to the “facts-in-themselves.” It can be asked if it is true that the proper way to live and get organized is discoverable in the experts’ design whether the people agree with them or not.

No two people are exactly the same. The social inquirer is not exempted from this Social members have their  own experiences and their own values. The inquirer too has his own.  In trying to analyse society the expert inquirer makes his approach genuine, that is, be as accurate as possible with the social facts. People give meaning and interpret their situations. the inquirer who fails to see this has mistaken the treatment of people for the treatment of things. The systematic and rigorous thinking in any genuine study of society must be cognizant of what is really in the social world. An inquirer’s analysis must be consistently based on his subject matter. Disregard for such a basic verity is seen in the expert’s attitude that deny people their chance to define and interpret their social lives. Social understanding and policy must be discoursed on the very meanings that people give to their situations.

The social philosopher, Alfred Schutz, in formulating his insights on social analysis, presented what he called “constructs of the second degree.” In inquiring into the social world the expert inquirer must never hold his interpretations against the interpretations of the social members. Imposing insights must be avoided. Experts, planners, and policy makers must be aware of the biases they have in looking at society. That is why understanding society is to see the very meanings inherent in peoples’ actions. Understanding society must consider what social members themselves have to say about their situation. Everything else belonging to the experts must be “second degree” founded on the “first degree” interpretations of the people themselves.

Second, and in a more practical sense, it is unreasonable to impose criteria on people especially when human suffering and death will be the consequences. Experts’ designs can be harmless if they only remain in theory,but the repercussions on peoples’ lives must be considered with utmost attention. Particular attention should be given to the interconnections between theory, policy, and human pain. What is intolerable is to allow the criteria to be imposed without peoples’ participation and acceptance.

The Paradigm: Social Phenomenology

If people, especially the poor, in the Philippines today are reduced to the level of objects in the planning and implementation of development projects, then, there is a need for a philosophic critique if this situation. The subjective must surface. The paradigm on which the philosophic analysis here stands is the phenomenological perspective, especially social phenomenology. A brief consideration of the history of Western philosophy may be helpful in seeing what phenomenology is.

During the Ancient- Medieval period, philosophers believed that they could grasp the very essence of things. With the advent of the natural sciences the notion that the universe is basically mathematical and mechanical was introduced. The task of science was to gain insight into the mathematical and mechanical world-in-itself. The science of man consequently became a way of trying to determine how to quantify man and fit him into the mathematical-mechanical models. Then, the problem emerged as to how to grasp the “fact-in-themselves.” For example, many asked if the physicist could really know the exact nature of matter. Furthermore, it was a problem in the human sciences to determine the precise models for human analysis.

There were, on the other hand, philosophers who pointed out that before studying things, the study of the mind must first precede. If, as the philosophers said, the world “in-itself” is not yet clear, maybe it is because the nature of the mind is not yet clear. Unfortunately, the mind was over-emphasized and everything became idealistic and even spiritualistic. Even the understanding of man became a way of trying to look for the structures of the  mind independent of the structures of the world.

Phenomenology is a study of what comes in between the world and the mind. It does not see the separation of the two for it believes that the world is a world for the mind and the mind is directed to the world. There is no world without mind and mind without world. In the same way, man is interpreted to be not just a part of the world nor simply part of pure mind. For the philosophers of recent phenomenology, man’s presence in the world is the emergence of meaning. The world makes sense because man is present to give meaning to it, and man fulfills his capacities of reason and understanding because of his being in the world.

Man has a special relation to the world and that is why we find many worlds, e.g., the world of art, the world of science, the world of the Chinese, the world of poverty, and so on. When the phenomenologist studies society, he talks of the world of everyday life wherein people routinely interact and organize themselves as a society. In fact, the phenomenologist would see the other world. In phenomenology the option of making the subjective surface means disclosing the everyday world of people and how people define themselves in that world.

Social Dimensions

The phenomenologist tries to recapture the richness of social experience by disclosing the varied ways through which society appears to the eyes of the ordinary man. To begin with, the social world is experienced as a human world. The experts’ reifications are abstractions and devitalizations of the human element in the experience. The social world contains the relation between and among people, a relation which can never be found with things. For example, picture someone rushing for work. As he elbows his way through people to get a ride, he may say, “I am sorry”. The experience of bumping against people is really different from the experience of bumping against a lamp post. No one will be sorry or repugnant towards a street lamp post, nor will the post demand respect and apologies from the one who accidentally bumps it. Nothing happens between the post and people. The social world is what happens between persons.

There are many profiles in the way people experience one another. Some people are known to us in intimate ways. They may be people in our family, people we live with, or people we work with. We know them through their characters or personalities. However, there are those people we do not know too well in terms of their personalities. In fact, we know them simply as people performing certain functions. We do not know if they are well-manned or ill-tempered; we do not know their private likes, dislikes, or preferences for this or that. As far as we are concerned, we simply know that they have particular things to do. These people are the policemen who handle peace and order, the mailmen who deliver the mail, the technocrats handling financial matters, and so on. Notice that we are not very intimate with them since we simply apprehend them in their functions. Unlike people we personally know, those we see only in terms of functions are anonymous.

Finally, we can even talk about groups or collectivities. A collectivity is composed of many individuals, many functions, even smaller groups. All are encapsuled in unity by virtue of being grouped. Now we really find here a high degree of anonymity. Consider, for example, what we mean when we say “the people of Western Mindanao”. What we have in mind is really a whole domain of individuals with different personalities, so many people of different works, so many ethnic religious groups, all lumped together. Obviously, we are not apprehending a unique, intimate person. When we apprehend a collectivity, we are not exactly referring to anyone in particular.

We can determine how people are intimate or anonymous to us in one or two ways. One way is through the generality by which we apprehend them. Knowledge of a friend cannot be so generalized. Our knowledge of a friend is rich in content because we get out information, so to speak, from his very concrete manifestations. We have seen the personality of our friend. The less close we are to people the more general we apprehend then. Often we get information of them from stories. Maybe someone told us about them, or we have read about them in the papers or books. At any rate, no matter what knowledge we get about them, we know them not as well as we would know a friend. Knowledge of them becomes general.

The type “mailman” for instance already covers many individuals who we do not necessarily know. All those individuals are generally known as people who handle the mail. Anonymity is most experienced in collectivity where speaking of people becomes really general. We do not apprehend each and every individual, nor the work he does. Rather, we see a group at large. Our everyday speech indicates how general we can get in apprehending a collectivity: “The Ilocano people are thrifty”, or “How can people become so unkind.” The “Ilocano” or “people” are really general terms.

The other way by which intimacy and anonymity are gauged comes in terms of the ease with which we relate with people personally. For example, we know how at ease we can become in facing our friends. We can easily approach them. The ease become less when it comes, for example to relating with the mailman. When we receive our mail, we know that it is not easy to pour out out joys or troubles to the mailman. Perhaps, we might even feel it wiser to simply get the mail, turn around and pour out  a friend while letting the mailman just move on. Finally, imagine how impossible it is to face directly “the people of Western Mindanao”. Apparently, here we are really aware of something very anonymous which, in sheer massivity, cannot even be addressed as a face-to-face partner. In our concrete day-to-day living, we can be amazed at how varied people are. People can be close or distant, intimate or anonymous. This is what profile means. We apprehend people in varying profiles.

So far we have looked into the experiences we have of people living today. This, obviously, is not the whole picture. There are also those people who lived in the past, and those who will come in the future. Some of those who lived in the past may have been personally close to us, e.g., our grandparents. They comprise a small circle of our predecessors. The past is also composed of those people who are historically distant. Some of them may have made it to the history books. We may be celebrating their death anniversaries. However, the great number of the unique, rich, and concrete lives are not reconstructed and may never be reconstructed. These concrete personal lives are apprehended in general terms. For example, the Katipuneros under Andres Bonifacio may be interpreted as valiant, brave, zealous , and willing to die  for the motherland. We do not know, however, the unique and concrete situations, feelings, and private goals of each and every soldier. Most people from the past are no longer apprehended in their uniqueness. The thousands of individual lives cannot be recalled except through generalities, e.g. the general trait of the soldiers, the ordinary life of the pre-Hispanic islanders, or the typical life of the Filipino during the revolution.

The generality by which we see the past influences the way we see the present. We may have a general idea that much of the Philippine economy today is foreign-controlled. This is because we have only a general understanding of the history behind this. A more in-depth study of the treaties, trade acts, and other agreements between the Philippine and United States governments will deepen our knowledge of foreign entrenchment in our soil. The less general our knowledge of the past becomes, the more in-depth our knowledge of the present situation is.

There are also those who will come in the future. Some of our successors may be personally close to us, such our children, our grandchildren, nephews, nieces. Nonetheless most people in the future will never be known to us personally.

We may have our commitments for the future, either personal or historical. Our goals and projects, no matter how near or far, have a way of telling us how we are to conduct our current lives. Envisioning a future state-of-affairs, we discover many of the reasons behind our actions today. If looking at the past may help us clarify the present, the way we perceive the future also helps clarify the present. Take for instance the struggles of the poor today, made symbolic through their protests, strikes and rallies. If we want to understand why they do these actions, we will also have to see how their hopes influence them today. They are hoping for a future of justice for their children and grandchildren.

The world of the future will always be open. Our actions today may influence the future. However, our successors may alter what we hope for because they might create a world which does not necessarily comply with the expectations of our dreams and hopes.

What transpires between persons in the social world can be very intricate. The complexity is largely determined by the fact that people experience each other in profiles of the near and the remote, the past and the future and the intimate and the anonymous. In fact, it is not enough to say that we experience people in varied ways. We are also apprehended, in turn, by others in varied ways. We also appear to them in profiles. With our friends, we experience ourselves being treated in an intimate way. We are anonymous to the mailman, for he does not know our personalities. We are but a statistical figure to the economist studying the income distribution of Region XI. We are the anonymous successors of our predecessors who worked for a world they expected we would support. Perhaps, we have changed their dreams. We will be one day left hidden in anonymity waiting to be unearthed by tomorrow’s historians.

We are never exempted from the profiles by which others see us. As we apprehend and interpret people, in whatever sector of the world and time they may be, we too are apprehended by them.

Interaction

Let us now investigate what happens between persons in the social scene. First of all, in everyday experience, we see that people’s actions make sense not just for us but also for those acting. The man knocking at the door carrying a neat bundle of pink sheets must be someone who intends to get our payments. We cannot accept the presupposition that he really has no business knocking at the door. Somehow, we ascribe sense to action, a sense which we think must belong to the person acting. That is why, if we cannot know about a person’s action we try to find out from him. Of course, we do make mistakes in interpreting people’s actions. The man knocking at the door may not be asking for bill payments but may instead be introducing his Mormon faith by giving out leaflets. That action of knocking at the door is, after all, infused with a sense of mission and not, as mistaken, an action of getting bill payments. Still, we see that the person’s actions had some purpose.

If experience tells us that people give sense to their actions, then we must know what action is. Before we proceed, however, we must be precise with our meanings of the word action. At times, it is understood to be something very significant, and could be associated with political or even revolutionary conduct. Although action may be overt, not all action need necessarily be so. Waiting for prices to increase before selling, postponing dialogue with management, deciding not to vie for a post in the club, these too are actions. There can be indecisions, passivity, even silence, in action. The teacher thinking about his lesson plan or the scientist working out in his head a formula, are also actions. Thus actions can be covert too.

Action always implies a “project”. We make some anticipations of what we may expect to fulfill. The project is none other than a state-of-affairs pictured as accomplished and completed, but the actual completion lies in the future. Thus, the different steps in the action are made to fulfill the project of the action. If there is no project there will be only aimless steps. Instead of action we may have mere physiological reflexes such as the face blushing, the pupils narrowing, or a kind of mental blackout that happens when a heavy object hits the head. Action must have its project, and here we find “meaningful action.” The meaning of an action is in its project. If we want to know the sense of an action we have to look into what it is trying to accomplish. A man turning the door-knob may have in mind getting into the room. The movements of the action, such as grasping the knob, turning it, and eventually pushing the door open, are all geared towards fulfilling the plan of being inside the room.

Action does not, however, arise from a vacuum. It is always situated. To act is to respond to the situation in which the person finds himself. That is why it can be said that an action’s project is demanded by the situation. While the project requires the steps necessary for its fulfillment, the situation in turn requires the establishment of the project itself. The man turning the knob wants to get in the room. Why? Perhaps, he is being chased by a huge dog. The situation impelled his project of getting into the room.

A main element in acting in daily life is that we believe in what we do. If fact, an effort is made to suspend doubts and questions that may run counter to the validity of our actions. The man kissing his newly wedded wife by the altar does not stop to ask if the married life is really his vocation. The laborer with eight children believes that his work must really be supportive of the family, There is found, in daily life, the attitude of taking things for granted. This carries the belied that we do not need to inquire so much into our daily actions. The taken-for-granted is that level of experience presenting itself as not in need of further analysis.

What sustains this attitude is the assumption that our actions have their consistency. On one hand, there is the belief that what were formerly successful will continue to be so now. The action has proven itself before, and hence, one takes it for granted that it will prove itself now. On the other hand, there is the belief that in as much as it has proven its success before, it can prove itself now. Thus there is no reason why it should not again prove itself in the future. Hence, what we usually do in the daily life attains a character of being typical. The action yesterday, now, and as expected, is typically the same action. Of course, there may be some differences in each occasion, but those elements that make the actions so unique and irretrievable from each other set aside as irrelevant. Those elements are largely taken for granted. That is why we are not very inquisitive about what we typically do. We have done actions before; we keep on doing them routinely, and we have always been met with sufficient success. So without much further ado, we expect that our next occasion to do such actions will show that the actions will work well. The actions are thus, again and again, typical.

When others come intimately into our lives it is difficult to typify them. This is because of the richness in which we experience them. Nonetheless, even intimate others can be typified. When mother is silent it typically means that she is angry over something. As we move out of intimacy, and enter into anonymity, we cannot rely so much on the concrete manifestations of peoples’ personalities. We rely more and more on general understanding about them. Thus, the more we typify them. For instance, the type ” mailman” means that there are people handling the mail. There may be different, unique individuals with their specific idiosyncrasies, but in daily life we take for granted their individualities and simple see the type. This goes for all our anonymous typifications. That is why, again, if we cannot comprehend someone’s action it is probably because we have not determined what type of thing he is doing. We fall short of trying to see the context of his action.

One important point is that the types that we have of people are not altogether arbitrarily made. When, we were born into the world we were told about how the world typically is. Already we find typical ways of calling things, e.g., dogs, cats, fish, trees, stones, and chairs. Included in the typifications we derive are those about other people. All these typifications are found in the milieu we are born into. Our parents, elders, teachers, and others have told us how to interpret and typify the world. When we were born into the society we were born into a shared world, evident in the typifications of the milieu. We become participants of the shared world.

A crucial aspect in being participants in the shared world is the way we got to learn to look at our own actions. Being born in the social milieu we realize what typical actions are “good” or “bad”. The experience of being in the church service finds the child’s inquisitive eyes looking out for interesting things. The child feels his way around, taking a step here, a step there. Soon he boldly runs about, touching objects on the floor, investigating people’s faces. and maybe even inviting other children to his noisy adventures. Then the long arms of the father and the wide embrace of the mother put the child in his place. The learning process goes on, and the lesson for the day is: noisemaking in the church is “wrong”.

In the social world we learn actions that are typical, and that is why our actions are not altogether private. Somehow, our actions are adjusted to the approvals in the milieu. We find that our actions become appropriate as they become defined as part of the typically accepted ways of acting. Yet, a great deal of the acceptance have their historical aspects. In other words, many of the typical actions have been historically established some time ago. Other people in the past have responded to certain situations with their particular actions. They found their actions to have worked successfully the actions have proven their worth. Such actions became the typical ways of responding to the situations from which they originated. These are then the typical actions vis-a-vis the corresponding typical situations.

Anyone engaged with the typical situations can simply respond with the typical action. At the start, the trials and errors have determined the most appropriate actions. These actions are then handed down, as tradition. Others who come later are saved the steps of having to find out and experiment on their own. They are simply told what the most appropriate actions are. The typical actions become part of the taken-for-granted ways of doing things. Sometimes, we realize that we do not know the history behind what we daily do. The origins of the actions may have been lost from the memory of everyone, including elders. Inasmuch as the actions continue proving themselves, it may not occur to us to suspect their origins. Examples are numerous: ways of right speech, ways of wearing clothes, search for success, ways of work, and so on. Today, we find thousands of young people trying to get the most wanted college diploma which will, supposedly, be their passport to success.

In the course of interactions with people, we orient ourselves towards others with the expectation of how they will be oriented toward us. The mutuality of actions are largely typical. Since we interpret others’ actions as typical it is also expected that others interpret out actions as typical. The types that we see of each other are mutually oriented. Take for example, riding a public vehicle. The type “driver” implies that the one behind the wheel brings people of the type “passengers” to their designated places. When on a vehicle we orient our actions according to the type expected of us, “passengers”, while the one driving orients his actions as expected of the type “driver”. We take for granted we are following the typifications expected of us.

Social members act towards one another according to how they typically see each other. Hence, social interactions occur by types, e.g., driver-passengers, consumer-manufacturer, labor-management, and land-lord-tenant, even laborer-to-laborer businessman-to-businessman. In the social world we find that we really take on many typical roles. Getting into a public vehicle we become “passengers”; arriving at work, we are “laborers”; receiving salary, we become the potential “consumers”; arriving home, we are the “neighbors”. Social living is a matter of taking roles typical in different sectors of time and place.

A few points can be mentioned in reaction to this. First, there is the realization that social members have ways of looking at each other. Here we find the notion that social members define and interpret their world. An expert inquirer will have t realize that the social milieu is rich with typifications and people follow generally the typical ways expected of them. To impose one’s own constructs is really to deny from the study the whole range of people’s interpretations. To understand people is to see their complex typifications, how they look at the world and themselves.

Secondly, society can have its sense of being a “home”. The social members are not just related with one another, they are participants in a shared world with accepted ways of doing things. To be part of the milieu is to be guaranteed that our actions have their rightful places. The conforming to and being adjusted to the given typifications of the milieu amount to having some kind of an order. Familiarity with things and actions is bred into us because our ways take part in the accepted ways. By following the contours of the typifications, especially the expected typical ways of acting, we social members are guaranteed the “rightness” or “wrongness” in what we do. The first personal pronoun “We” indicate what this means. The use of the pronoun seems to presuppose that everyone is part of the common, shared ways of doing things: “We members of the association”, “We members of the barangay, “We citizens”. Mutuality is a taken-for-granted reality and everyone is identified in it. So a fundamental experience of social living is within and being a part of the whole.

Finally, anonymity is part of social existence. Anonymity is characterized by rigid orders established through long historical processes. A great part of social relations are conducted along the ways of the established orders and therefore need not always account for individual preferences and feelings. Social relations, we must remember, move in more than just intimate relations. For life in society to be humanly possible is for that life to be also engaged in the public world. Without managing a common world of typical ways of defining things, we find a very fragmented social world. Without anything publicly attainable, we find an absence of an important condition for human authenticity.

Concluding Remarks: On the Importance of Reflection
This essay has pointed out that social members do establish and maintain their own social reality. First, it shows that people experience one another in varied ways depending on the proximity and distance they have towards one another. Hence, the interpretations they make about each other are really situated within the stratifications. We can see why people can be intimate or anonymous towards one another. Secondly, the essay has shown that typifications are crucial in the mutuality between and among social members. The typifications, especially of actions, determine how social members are to act towards one another. Secondly, the essay has shown that typifications are crucial in the mutuality between and among social members. The typifications, especially of actions, determine how social members are to act towards one another. A great deal of social relations are really colored by the mutuality of types.

Let it be stressed that all typical interpretations and the consequent interactions are to be found within the confines of society itself. Hence, instead of searching for the sense of social behavior outside society, we must engage in understanding society by keeping in constant touch with the typifications inherent within the society. Failure to realize this can lead to imposition.

Experts have their own ideas as to what they believe to be the outcome expected of any social action. They assume that social behavior functions according to certain typical expectations outside of and regardless of the peoples’ ways. The experts interpret social living from their own typifications in the belief that their claims can be applied to the whole of society. Their understanding involves interpreting society with typifications that are not in conjunction with peoples’ interpretations. Perhaps, the experts really wish to serve the people in good faith, but in putting their ideas into effect, they run counter to the expectations and goals of people. Believing in the objectivity of their designs, the experts would rather listen only to themselves. Along the way impositions take place.

People too have an active role in such impositions. It was mentioned above that people, in their daily lives, tend to take a lot of things for granted. They are not always inquisitive about everything. When the experts present very inviting statements about development and progress, people might just take it for granted that what experts say are really promising. To take things for granted can be myopic. People may believe that their own goals and dreams can be better facilitated by the know-how of the experts. To couple peoples’ attitude of taking things for granted with the experts’ confidence in their own ideas contributes to our social ills. When experts present what they believe are the most appropriate ways to live, people take for granted that they are shown the best. Soon, people undergo a historical transformation largely dependent on what experts say. Then, people are led to situation they do not really intend, with their children and grandchildren trapped in the same unfortunate fate. At the same time the experts, perceiving the people’s disappointments, start blaming external economic or political forces, or worse, start accusing people of their failure to appreciate and cooperate with what are being done for them.

Let us make some final remarks regarding the state-of-affairs above. First, typifications are products of people; objective designs are products of experts. Social members and social experts are humans. They are not things. Things affect one another without having to define and interpret one another. The relations between things do not require their mutual approvals, disapprovals, conformity, or contrariety. When water boils it does not do so because it is complying with what heat expects. It does not decide on how to respond when fire is placed under it. Water does not know what it is doing, what it must to do, and what it must not do. When heated, it simply steams, a matter of cause and affect. What happens to a thing is an effect of external forces, what happens to society is born out of mutual interactions.

Social members tend to forget that they are the forces behind their own social orders and histories. They take the realities of their actions for granted. Their actions are attended to as if they are final, valid, and not in need of further questions. There seems to be nothing else wanting aside from what are typically done. Social members adapt to the course of the typical. So long as the typical actions are confirmed. social members find no need for further questions. The actions, having been successful, become the typical vital forces for the success of contemporary life. Having proven their success now, the actions are expected to be, again and again, successful in the future. Consequently, fitted into daily life is the forgetfulness of the human authorship underneath the typifications. The typical appears to be independent of and external to people as if the typical has always existed. Hence, anyone born into the milieu is told to internalize what he did not, in the first place, establish. He is molded into the contours of society’s typifications. The typical originally egressed from human authors, but in the long run, became authors of human lives. People sustain the typical by adjusting themselves to them. Their lives thus become products of the typical.

The experts, on the other hand, may think of leaving behind people’s typifications to enter into a more supposedly objective region. They study in famous universities and finish technical degree courses. They may even pursue and finish studies abroad or in the prestigious universities here. They are then equipped with a different set of typifications.

The structure of forgetfulness found within society is also found to be in the experts’ regions. Experts take for granted that their scientific theories and findings are so obviously valid there is no need to ask if these are also human interpretations of society. Of course, it is naive to say that their training is useless and arbitrary. The great insights of the scientists in the past are not to be undermined. The point made here, however, is the fact that everything said about society, no matter how complex and scientific, are nonetheless related to the scientists’ and experts’ way of looking, perceiving, and interpreting. To forget this is to be drawn into false reifications. The fact of imposing designs on people can also be attributed to this failure of experts to see that their statements and insights are related to their own subjectivity. They think that their designs are external to themselves and to social members such that everyone simply has to conform to the external validities.

The philosophic critique of this essay is now evident: there is the need to confront the tendency to forget and even deny the importance of the subjective in defining social reality. A final remark can be offered. We must consider the pragmatic import of our analysis.

One of the trends today towards social transformation in education is what is commonly called “conscientization”. Philosophy, although not appearing to be directly engaged with the praxis of change, is today aware of its aware of its form of reflection which can be helpful to social transformation. Phenomenological-philosophical reflection makes explicit the relations between human subjectivity and its meaningful reality. Reflection inquiries into the ways by which the human being gives meaning to his experiences. In a more technical language, reflection delineates the whole structure of consciousness and how consciousness establishes the significance of its experiences. With regard to our concern in this essay, philosophic reflection can be said to remind us that social members and even the experts are human beings intrinsically related to the realities that they define. Secondly, reflection can be a tool describing how precisely the relations proceed. This will definitely awaken people’s awareness to their own possibilities as authors of their own destiny. Instead of neglecting their humanity, people will be given the chance to rediscover their dignity as the essential component of their history. Finally, and in an existential sense, reflection can help people realize that whatever reality and history they establish, all these are nonetheless merely human products. This is not to degrade people. It is true that human finitude and human limitations can also be careful of its ambitions and dreams. The philosophic analysis must stress this because when philosophy declares the final frontiers of being human, it readily assents tot eh exigency of religious Hope.

Philosophic analysis in the seminars of the Ateneo de Davao University social involvement programs is usually followed by theological reflections. It is really fitting to make theology the next area for social considerations because, after showing the human limits discussed by philosophy, theology opens avenues for a more transcendent and eternal reality.

The Social Scene in Davao 1900-1945

The years 1900-1956 saw the coming to Davao of more and more foreign migrants, from far away lands, and domestic migrants, from other parts of the Philippine Archipelago, seeking wealth, freedom, and a better life. The population of Davao increased with the influx of these migrants. such a situation made Davao a society of immigrants, who dared explore new frontiers.

By the time the Americans came to Davao as a new colonial power at the turn of the 19th century, Davao was already peopled by the indigenous ethnic tribes found in the interior of hinterland; by the Muslim settlers, found along the the coasts; and by Christian Filipinos (the descendants of Davao’s first Filipino Christian settlers of 1818 and the Christian Filipino migrants from Luzon and the Visayas, who migrated to Davao to escape political persecutions in their provinces), army deserters, a few fugitives, and the foreign migrants (Chinese, Indonesians, Hindus, Bombays, Syrians, Lebanese) who inhabited the cabacera or town proper.

Davao is a province of many ethnic tribes. Ethnic division among the local population in the community arose as a matter of historical development. The different ethnic tribes had already formed their own communities. Each tribe is different from the other tribes. There was cultural interaction among tribal communities. Their activities were determined by the social practices within their communities. They retained their own languages and their traditional way of life.

The indigenous ethnic tribes are the Atas, Bagobos, Guiangans, Tagakaolos, Bilaan, Manobos, Mandayas, Mansakas and other who live in the interior or hinterland.

The Muslim inhabitants of Davao came from Maguindanao, Cotabato and other parts of Mindanao and Sulu. The Davao Muslims were observed to have the same customs as the other ethnic tribes except that they abstain from eating pork. they were not feared, because of their isolation and their small number. They inhabited the coast of navigable rivers because their homes were small boots. Davao Muslims were nomadic and scattered themselves along both sides of the river and did not form villages, unlike the other ethnic tribes. Their occupations were fishing and trading. Among the Muslims, the effects of public and private education were slowly felt. Although these Muslims regard the Southern Islands as their ancestral homeland, they are now minority in the area because of Christian migration, wherein they somehow suffered systematic social disadvantage.

Both the indigenous ethnic tribes and the Davao Muslims are now exposed to Western culture. Most of the indigenous tribes now dress like other Christian Filipinos and only wear their elaborate traditional clothing during rare occasions like fiestas. But the Davao Muslims, like those in other parts of Mindanao, remained faithful to their Islamic religion and native traditions, as well as to their native costume, the malong. They are no longer polygamus and slaveholders. There are no more juramentados among them. Even in their language, the indigenous tribes and the Muslims are now conversant in Tagalog, Visayan and English.

To promote community life among the nomadic indigenous tribes and the Muslims and to break their migratory habits, the newly arrived Americans, who were able to settle and acquire undeveloped lands, encouraged these tries to settle in fixed communities. Those who were in the highlands were transferred to the coasts and provided labor to the newly opened plantations of the Americans. But the natives, especially the Bagobos, did not like living in the plantations. The Chinese were far more numerous than the Americans and other migrants.

Established Communities and their Social Organizations

It is said that people are the greatest assets of a community. Without them there can be no society and without society no community can exist.

The early American community in Davao was composed of former soldiers-turned-settlers/planters, school teachers, Protestant missionaries, engineers who built bridges and roads, government officials and their families. They look active part in the different social activities in the community.

The socio-cultural influences of the American were the democratic way of life, public education and the Protestant Religion. In 1903, Rev. and Mrs. Robert Black were sent by their home church in the United States to Davao upon the request of the pioneer American planters and congregational missionaries in the primitive and pestilential Davao Gulf area.

More and more pioneer settlers acquired undeveloped lands. They developed the land into plantations that started the plantation economy in Davao. most of these plantations that started the plantations economy in Davao. Most of these plantations were located around the Davao Gulf area.

The Americans settled in their coastal plantations. The wives of some planters described life in the frontier community as joyful, despite hardships and deprivations. Every so often, they would board launches, which plied the Davao Gulf to make business with the native inhabitants in the interior. They bought abaca and sold things that they had.

Clubs were organized in the community to keep alive a vital and invigorating community spirit. In the town proper or cabecera, an American Club was organized where, on weekends, it served as the gathering place for lonely planters and their families coming from the coast plantations. The club became the center of social activities and a place for Americans to relax and share experiences with one another. People in the poblacion lived simply, with no hotels and no recreation centers, except one cinema house, owned by Jerry Roscom, an American Settler.

The town proper had for its inhabitants mostly the Visayan Christians, who were recruited by the American and Filipino migrant planters from the Visayas to work on their newly-opened plantations and the third generation descendants of the first Christian settlers of 1848. The other inhabitants were the foreign migrants like the Chinese, Hindus, Bombays, Syrians, a few Americans,and some Japanese.

American Cultural policies were heavily concentrated on public education. Public Schools were established and opened on both on the elementary and secondary levels in the town proper and outskirts . In the beginning, school officials and teachers were Americans, but later, the Filipinos took over after they were trained to teach. But most of the indigenous ethnic tribes resisted education. School officials and teachers exerted efforts to reach them for the education of their children. Extension classes were opened in the mirror to reach the most isolated tribes.

During the period, there was only one public elementary school and one public secondary school, the Davao High School, in the poblacion proper. Both schools were first located at Magallanes Street. The only elementary school in the poblacion proper, the Davao Central School, was opened in the early 1920. In the outskirts, the first school was put up to Daliao, being the center of development in 1918. When the Sta. Ana area in the poblacion was developed, another elementary school was established which was the Sta. Ana Elementary School.

The first private schools at the time were: the Immaculate Conception Institute (now University) for girls, founded by the RVM Sisters: St. Peter’s school for boys (first handled by the Jesuits and later by the P.M.E priests); and the Davao Institute which was established by Mr. Godofredo Duremedes. Now at Claveria Street in the vicinity of the Awad building.

The Immaculate Conception College was a Catholic school originally established for girls. It was managed by the Religious of the Virgin Mary (RVM), a congeregation founded by a Filipina, Mother Ignacia del Espiritu Santo. The ICC was founded by three pioneering RVM Sisters in 1905. These sisters laid the foundation for a Mission School here in Mindanao. A year after they arrived, a formal school, St. Peter’s Parochial School, was opened.

As the Population grew, more schools were opened. Fresh high school graduates were hired to teach elementary school pupils because of the shortage of teachers. The school’s Division Superintendent then, Mr. John Stumbo, even recruited fresh graduates of the Zamboanga Normal High School, Class 1937, to teach in Davao.

During the period of the 1920’s the Japanese community grew and developed in Davao. Ohta Kyosaburu became one the leaders of the Japanese community. It was also during this period that the Japanese colony in Davao continued to prosper. A self-contained community had developed. There was the Japanese School, built on one of the main streets (present site of the University of Mindanao along Bolton St.); clinics and hospitals (like the Mintal Hospital), staffed by Japanese doctors and Nurses, were opened; newspapers came direct from Japan; Japanese shops and banks were opened and Japanese-style houses were built and also Japanese entertainment parlors were opened. In March 1920, an annex of the Manila Consulate of Japan was opened in Davao and housed in the site where the present University of Mindanao Gymnasium is located.

The Japanese community was well-organized and self-contained. the Japanese settlers were observed by other inhabitants as industrious, cooperative, thrifty, and obedient to laws. The Japanese community established the Japanese Davao Association, which served as the center of their activities. The association coordinated the social interests of the Japanese settlers. It was organized to assure better living conditions for the members and their families. It also provided financial and medical assistance to those in need of help and extended educational benefits to the member’s children. Primary and secondary schools were built and maintained by the Japanese Davao Association in the town proper and on the outskirts, patterned after the prevailing system in Japan, with Nipongo as the medium of instruction.

Michael E. Dakudao, a Doctor of Architecture by profession (he finished his Masteral and Doctoral degree in Architecture at Tokyo University in Japan), had this to say about the Japanese in Davao…;

While in Davao, the Japanese adhered to the whole fabric of Japanese customs and traditions and they introduced dominant institutions towards maintaining a high consciousness of the Japanese way of life. The Nippon Jin Kai (Japanese Association), which functioned as the governing body of the Japanese nationals, was founded on May 1, 1916. The first Japanese Consulate building was constructed in 1920. By 1936, a total of 12 Japanese Primary Schools were established. Regarding the Japanese religion, shrines and several temples were built on the areas where the Japanese Settled. The first modern hospital in Davao, the Ohta Development Company Hospital in Mintal, was built by the Japanese.

Mintal was known then as “little Nagasaki” because there were more Japanese residents there than Filipinos. Japanese schools were opened where only Japanese children were enrolled. The Mintal Hospital was opened, with Japanese doctors and Japanese nurse employed. Only a few Filipino doctors were hired, like Dr. Santiago P. Dakudao, Sr. and Dr. Juan Santos Cuyugan, to name a few.

The Japanese community also constructed and maintained private roads which were also opened to the public without charge. The number of Japanese residents in Davao, ad recorded in 1937, totaled 15, 150.

There was communal exclusiveness among the Japanese settlers that prevented their integration into the mainstream of Davao society. Only a few married native women.

During the late 1920s and the middle of the 1930s, the town population was small. The Dabawenyos then active in social life were the third generations descendants of Davao’s first Filipino Christrian settlers of 1848, who came with Oyanguren in the latter’s “conquest”of Davao. These Dabawenyos, aware of the social role they had to play, put up organizations to embrace the natives of Davao, as well as the migrants who decided to make Davao their home. They organized the “Hijos de Mindanao“, which was later changed to “Hijos de Mindanao y Sulu“, to include the Sulu Muslims in Davao under the Leadership of Davao Kanapia with whom the “Hijos developed a strong brotherhood. These Dabawenyos had their annual affairs, usually held as picnics. These affairs were sort of a big family gatherings of Dabawenyos, attended by families and their children, including household helps and friends. They sang Dabaw folk songs under the talisay trees and coconut groves by the beach (as recalled by Noning Lizada, a Dabawenyo historian, in a write-up). the young Dabawenyos studying in Manila organized the “Davao Club”. Whenever the Governor of Davao, Sebastian Generoso, was in Manila he made visits to the Davao Club members.

In the 1930s and early 1940s, as groups of adventurous Filipinos from Luzon, Visayas and other parts of Mindanao came to Davao, after hearing of the good fortune Davao offered, the teen-aged children of the “Hijos de Mindanao y Sulu” formed the “Tayo-Tayo” Club in the town and took as members other children of their ages, regardless of regional origins. This club because the social group of the young and was regarded as the youth club of the time.

In the late 1940s (1945-1946), when World War II ended, the Dabawenyos who pursued their studies in Manila thought of organizing themselves and formed the Club Dabawenyo. Yearly, the members of the club celebrated in Manila the June 29 feast of St. Peter.

The late Atty. Manuel G. Cabaguio, a prominent Dabawenyo, who enroleld in the year 1915 at the San Pedro convent PARVOLITO class, has this to say about the San Pedro Parish, said to be the biggest parish then in Mindanao:

The San Pedro Parish included the present area of the City of Davao, Davao del Sur, the sea coast portion of Davao Oriented of what is now Lupon and Governor Generoso and of Davao del Norte up to the boundary of Agusan. And this parish was served by two and at times, by three priests and two brothers, whose duties were to take care of the church and the convent.

Every year one priest, usually it was the associate priest, went out to evangelized the natives. These visits usually lasted for ten days because of the inadequacy of the transportation. There were no vehicles and the roads were only trails through forest and ravines.

During fiestas, the priest said masses and baptized natives even without the benefit of religious instruction as required now. In the baptism it was the practice to use the surnames of the padrinos who were selected from the prominent people of the community. The trips of the priest to the coastal towns and the hinterlands were dangerous and tiresome. Of course food preparation was excellent and delicious but the priest and his inseparable sacristan had to sleep on bamboo floors. Marriages and baptisms were mostly free unless the padrino happened to be very influential in the community.

The town plaza in the cabecera called the Plaza Oyanguren, now known as Osmeña Park, was a part of the church property until the year 1917 when the first Civil Governor, the late Eulalio Causing from Cebu, requested Fr. Rebull to relinquish church claims on the said portion.

The random recollection of many events during the early Davao days narrated by old-time migrants helps one learn about Davao’s past. One such old-time migrant is Elena Iñigo, known as Aling Nena to the Dabawenyos and the mother of the present Dean of the College of Law of the Ateneo de Davao University. Atty. Hildegardo Iñigo. Aling Nena comes from a Tagalog family that migrated to Davao in the year 1905. She recalls that during the early 1900s there was peace everywhere in Davao. One could sleep soundly at night. People all over Davao seemingly knew one another. She talked of migrants from Luzon who permanently established residence hereabouts. She not only talked of people but also of activities like the arrival of ships from Manila once a month that gave Dabawenyos happiness.

The Cebuanos, Tagalogs, Boholanos, Ilocanos, and other domestic migrants put up their own social organizations. To quote former Judge Pedro C. Quitain, a Batangueño and a Davao old timer, in a written interview he stated that…

On or before 1927 life in Davao was rather dry in that there was not much social intermingling among the people. This could have been due to the diversity of the social outlook among people who come from various sectors of the country. The Visayans obviously socialized among themselves — the Cebuanos, Boholanos, Capizeños, Ilocanos and Antiqueños did the same. They kept themselves in a rather clannish way. Among those from Luzon, the Ilocanos displayed a more prominent clannish disposition compared to the Tagalogs, the Bicolanos, and the Kapampangans who appeared to have developed a certain degree of oneness in more ways than one.

As early years as 1924 the Caveteño migrants from Cavite in Luzon formed their social organization which was called the Buklod ng Cavite. The organization was established in order to help them intermingle among themselves during their free time time and also to help fellow Caviteños who came to Davao for the first time. After the day’s or week’s work, attending to their business of selling meat, fish, and vegetables in the market attending to their transportation business, they gathered in the residence of the transportation business, they gathered in th residence of the Angeleses in Claveria street (one of the three oldest street in Davao) to socialize. The residence was not along the main street but in the “looban” (interior) which served as the liason of all adventurous Caviteños who are the grandparents and parents and parents of the younger Caviteños now, imbued in their children the value of education and discipline. Parents sent their children to school for formal education. By 1926 up to the 1930s, according to surveys, there were already more or less 20,000 Caviteño residents in Davao.

The migrants from the Visayas also formed their social organizations, the purpose of which were also the same as those of the other migrant organizations. The Waray Waray Association was organized by the Leyteños and Samareños who speak the Waray dialect. Like the other migrants’ associations they met and had social affairs.

Masonic ideals and practices were introduced in the province of Davao during the early part of the American regime when Frank Carpenter, and American Mason, was Civil Governor and Celestino Chavez, a Filipino Mason, was Deputy Governor for Davao. It was in 1918 when a group of Masons met for the first time to discuss the idea of forming a Masonic Lodge in Davao. With proper dispensation from the Grand Lodge of the Philippine Lodge of the Philippine Islands, the Sarangani Lodge No. 50 was organized in 1919 in the town of Davao.

The members of the Masonic group (Sarangani Lodge No. 50) indulged themselves in charitable and humanitarian activities. The influence of Masonry in the Davao society became predominant and noticable. Their annual installation of officers had always been a significant social affair, attended not only by Masons but also by non-Masons with respect. They say Masons contributed much to the social and cultural development of Davao.

Another social activity of activity of great significance was the establishment of the Davao Mason’s Women’s Auxillary composed of wives of Davao Masons. This organization sponsored wholesome social gathering such as grand balls, picnics, excursions or birthday parties that promoted goodwill, unity and fellowship among Davao Masons and Non-Masons. Through this organization, the Davao Puericulture center and the Davao Women’s Club were organized to promote and advance the interest and welfare of mothers and babies.

Festivals were social affairs involving the community. The more popular festivals were religious in nature. The Catholics celebrated yearly the feast of St. Peter every 29th of June. When Fiesta time came people from the outskirts trooped to the town proper to hear Mass in the morning at San Pedro Church and stayed up to late in the afternoon for the procession in honor of the patron saint, St. Peter. Other religious festivals were held on New year, Christmas, and other holy days of obligation. The majority of the Filipino Christian migrants in Davao were Roman Catholics and only a few were Protestants. The foreign migrants also had their festivals. The Muslims also observed their religious obligations.

The organizer of the Protestant church in Davao, related to the United Church of Christ in the Philippines (UCCP), was Rev. Robert Black, the Evangelical Church, who was sent here in 1903 by the Board of Commissioners for Foreign Mission, now the United Church Board for World Ministries.

The Chinese migrated to Davao, earlier than the Japanese. They had already traded with the native tribes long before the Spaniards came to Davao. They first came as traders bringing with them goods in exchange for Davao Products. But later, when they found great opportunities for a better life and business, they settled here permanently at the turn of the 20th century–the early years of the American regime. These migrants from China intermingled with the other inhabitants of the town proper or cabacera.

The Chinese established their community in the capital town. They organized the Davao Chinese Educational Association with the aim of giving their group the opportunity to be educated. They also established and opened the Davao Chinese High School which was open to both rich and poor. Filipino children were also accepted as students.

By 1923, the Chinese in Davao increase to over a thousand in number, coming from the provinces of Fookien and a Kwangton (Canton), China in search of better opportunities and good life. On June 2, 1923, the Consul General of the Republic of China to the Philippines, Hon. Chao Kuo Shian, arrived in Davao for the first time on an observation tour. Upon seeing the big number of Chinese, school for the children. The proposal was welcomed by the populace. On June 6, a meeting of the Chinese residents was called by the Honorary Consul. During the meeting, the Chinese Educational Association was organized, with Mr. Chua Chin San elected as the First Board Chairman over a board membership of twelve persons. Later, both Mr. Te and Mr. Chua worked for the recruitment of funds and teachers and government approval for the school. On June 3, 1924, the school opened in a rented house on San Pedro Street, with two classrooms to thirty pupils. Because of the dire need for a school site to put up a school building, the Board approached Mr. Juan Lim Villa Abrille who immediately donated a one hectare lot in Sta. Ana Avanue which became the site of the Davao Chinese High School.

Davao is a cosmopolitan community where ethnic groups have preserve their languages and customs. The foreign and the Christian Filipino migrants in the town proper/cabecera maintained a social existence wholly different and distinct from that of the native indigenous tribes and Muslims. Many of the indigenous tribes encountered discrimination and suffered social disadvantages. The gap between the groups was caused by the differences in education, social background, wealth, and social standards. The native indigenous tribes lagged behind the Christian Filipinos and foreign migrants in matters of educational attainment. The Davao Muslims were in an intermediate position culturally between Christian Filipino migrants and the indigenous ethnic tribes.

As an immigrant society, Davao still attracted people from other parts of the Philippines and other lands until the later part of 1945. The people of Davao had proven that people of many different backgrounds could live together in peace and harmony.

Social History of Davao at the end of the 19th Century

Introduction

I am a fifth generation member of one of the first families that established the Spanish settlement in Davao in 1848. My great, great, great grandfather,Gabriel Bangoy, was the first Cabeza of Davao during the Spanish time in 1853. My grandfather, Ciriaco R. Lizada, was the last American to be appointed by the American Military Government in the 1900s.

Perhaps it is also good to know, as a backgrounder, who were the people of Davao (City) before, during and after the Spanish established its settlement here. Davao was first inhabited by the Bagobos, one of the several tribes in Davao. In the latter part of the 1400s, Islam took its roots when Muslims settled along its coasts. In 1848, the Spaniards established the first settlement in Davao. In the 1900s, the Americans took over the colonization of Davao from the Spaniards.

These are the times, the events and the people that I will dwell on briefly based on the stories and experiences of the first, second, third, and fourth generation members of my family.

 Davao At The Tarn Of The Century

All throughout the Spanish occupation, the evangelization of the non-Christian tribes was a major concern of the missionaries and the settlers. From the time of the first settlers to the time of their children evangelization continued.

Vic Generoso, my Spanish teacher, wrote in the 1884 San Pedro Fiesta publication:

“…much help was given the missionary by the old time Christians, notably Aniceto Bustamante, Damaso Suazo, Teodoro Palma Gil,Ciriaco R. Lizada and Calixto Cervantes…”

All of those mentioned were second and third generation members of the first settlers. The term “first settlers” refers to the Christian migrants who came with the Spanish colonizers to Davao at the end of the 19th century to settle and colonize Davao.

My father told us how my grandfather helped the missionary in his work.

They would cross the Bankerohan river in banca, walk up to the end of the road at Matina (Matina Golf Club), turn left towards the shore (Times Beach) and there take a banca and paddle for hours towards Daliao to convert the natives to the new faith; or… go on horseback with Teodoro Palma Gil up the hills of Mandug to be with the natives in their villages to explain Christianity.

They even reached as far as Davao del Sur in Darong together with Fr. Urios. There, in 1894, Datu Timan, a Bagobo datu . and his tribe were baptized. He also told us how other relatives, like his cousin-in-law, Don Francisco Bangoy, assisted the baptism of the datu and his tribe in Tigatto.

The need to evangelize was there, as some natives still practiced human sacrifice secretly. In Toril, where the de la Cruz family decided to stay with their Bagobo friends, the same was true. One day, his Bagobo male friends passed by his house, preceded by a carabao-pulled sled, where a rather big sack was moving. Curiosity prompted him to ask what it was and he was informed that they were going to perform a tribal offering in a nearby forest. Inside the sack a blind boy was tied up and on the way to be sacrificed. Having established good rapport with the datu, my grandfather reminded him that such a practice was now prohibited. He suggested that, instead of sacrificing the blind boy. he be given to him as a gift. This the datu did. The boy became my house helper in Toril up until he was 70 years old. He stayed with us and remained loyal to my uncle !until he died an old man, not knowing who his real relatives were,I not even his father and mother.

The Settlement of the Pioneers

At first, the little Spanish settlement was an attraction to the surrounding natives. Bagobos and other natives came to town, some bringing along teenage boys and girls, offering them to us to work in our homes. Usually, the agreement was consummated with an exchange of dry goods. In my grandfather’s house there were nine of them, working happily, and doing all kinds of jobs such as chopping firewood and running errands.

In many houses there were “ulipon“, which actually meant slave as they were then called. Later they became like members of the family. This was true even in the thirties. One Christmas Eve, while we were waiting for the Midnight Mass, a Bagoba came with two little children begging for a place to stay. Later, she asked to leave her children with us. My aunt accepted the two little girls and they stayed with her until they were grown up and were married. Their mother just visited them once in a while. She continued to stay up in the hills, while her daughters grew up in our household.

 Life in the Town

Everybody in the town was self-sufficient. At the back of their homes were vegetables and fruit trees. Out in the front yard were chickens and pigs. In Lanang, grandfather constructed a but on stilts. During high tide, when the but is surrounded by deep waters, they would go by banca and fish inside the but for their meals.

There was not much to buy in the town. There was no I need for a market as everybody already had what the market had to offer. There was just a Chinese store selling dry goods.
There was not much use for money. Land was abundant, food was sufficient, and the vessel that came from Manila came irregularly. In the meantime, money was kept and children played with big coins.

One of the children of Antolin Bangoy (son of Gabriel Bangoy). who was also a cabeza de  barangay recalls using big coins toy cooking pans in their game, bahay-bahayan. Up in the mountains, the Mandayas bored holes in them and made them into necklaces and bracelets (up to now the old necklaces are made out of old coins). In grandmother’s house, she kept coins in  bamboo nodules, breaking them after a certain time to wash the molds off the big “pesetas” and later dry them under the sun . Then she put them back in to a new bamboo tube.

The Gas Lit Streets

Father remembered the little dusty streets, lit by gas lamps, and the “parolero” who kept track of the position of the mcon to save petrol. On moonless nights he would fill the lamp with gas enough to last until morning. During halfmoons he put enough gas to light the streets until the moon shone fully and lighted them with moonlight. At full moon, he used very little petrol.

       Early Education

The early education of the first settlers took place in the convento. It started from grade one. Each year, the situation was improved by adding a book or two. They were all proud to say that even at a lower grade they knew how to read and write and that their morals were grounded on good values.

       The First Roads

The first roads were more like trails than streets. In 1905, when grandfather constructed the house at Bolton, Bolton was no more than a pathwalk, two meters wide, with hog wire and beetlepalms on the sides. San Pedro went as far as the present Anda then to Legaspi. Claveria extended up to the present Ideal theater, the place being planted with abaca by the Bangoys. In these little streets, particularly San Pedro, athletic competitions, such as the one hundred meters race, were held. There were no cars then; just horses on the streets.

 

 The Pioneering Days

 

Truly, these were the days of the real pioneers. It was they who cleared the forests, opened little farms, walked by the beach to Lanang, paddled bancas to Daliao, and rode horses to the hills. It was they who interacted and befriended the natives and developed the Davao dialect, a combination of Visayan and one or two native languages. Dabawenyo, or the Dinabaw dialect, was spoken by the early settlers. It was used by the children of the Spanish colonizers, children of the Bagobos of the hills, and children of the Davao Muslims. (Dinabaw is a Mandaya-based dialect). These people were later referred to as the Dabawenyos, people whose roots were traced to the Davao tribe or members of the families of pioneers.

 The Most Important Event of the Century

Aside from the evangelization of the natives, and the organization of the town, the most significant event of the century was the land grants and recognition of land ownership by the Spaniards. Proprietorships led to the development of lands. Thus inspired, people from all over the world decided to come to Dav Spaniards from Spain, Chinese, Japanese, and Americans all came to Davao for lands.

 

     The Cross and the Crescent

 

At the turn of the century, one of the events remembered most by my parents was the time when there was shooting in the streets, with people running and shouting, as they took refuge :n the convento. This was the time when the Spanish authorities, having lost the Philippines to the U.S., were about to leave and factions were formed to take over the Spanish government of the town. A coalition was attempted but did not last. The chief of the police, together with his wife and a relative, was assassinated by one of his own soldiers. The assassin became the chief but later on was also killed. People were taking the law into their own hands.

Amidst this confusion, Fr. Urios and Fr. Benaiges went out to the streets. holding back those were fighting, and removed the guns from them. Yet the fear of anarchy was there. The fear of a Muslim take over of the town was foremost. However. the letter of Balaguer, written on April 17, 1899, narrated a very important and significant. event of the day:

It was admirable to behold the heads of the towns
of the Moros presenting themselves to Fr. Urios
placing themselves under his orders and telling
him that they did not recognize any other authority
except his, and that if they found themselves
threatened they would be the first ones to defend
us…

This is one moment of time in Davao’s history that should be cherished, remembered and honored for here Muslims and the two priests stood together for peace, thus restoring peace in the Christian town of Davao.

     In the 1930s

The coconut trees planted by the early settlers were not bearing fruit. On the other hand, the ranches of the Spaniards were thriving well and so were the 55 American owned abaca plantations. The abaca lands of the migrants and the Bagobos were all stripable and productive. The coming of Japanese investors contributed to the progress of Davao in the thirties. Compared to the 1900s, Davao in the 30s was a far cry from the little town of the 1850s, yet it retained its provincial and rural air.

On The Street Where We Lived

The once little trail that was Bolton now had residences with gardens in front, and flower hedges all around, while others still had the old trees of the 1900s. At the back of our house remained three huge acacia trees, a thick bamboo grove, and some banana plants. On some days, the Bagobos still walked the street in single file, children, women, the men and the Datu.

Later. at sunset, swarms of black feathered red-eyed birds (Lansilang) swooped down to roost on the big mango tree on the yard of the Hizon residence at the corner of Bolton and Rizal Streets. Up in the sky, thousands of bats came from Samal Island in seemingly endless hordes. Some flew low to roost in the kapok tree on the street while others continued their flight to the hills.

At six in the evening the church bells rang the Angelus. The few people on the street stopped to pray. Children in Bolton were nowhere to be found as we were all trained to be home before six to join the family in prayer. At nine in the evening the street was almost deserted. Neighborhood dogs lingered and lay on the street. People walking by carried “bastones” (canes) to ward off the dogs which had the habit of sniffing pedestrians. In the mornings the chimneys from a few houses emitted white smoke as breakfast was cooked with firewood. All houses had water tanks. to catch the rainfall for drinking.

 The Social Classes of the Thirties

People in the town were identifiable by the way they dressed:

a. People wearing coats and ties were either professionals or people engaged in white collar jobs.

b. People wearing maongs or denims were laborers as maong was used by “hag-uteros”, that is, abaca fiber strippers.

c. People wearing rubber shoes belonged to the lower income bracket, as people in the upper income level always wore leather shoes.

d. People sporting two holstered revolvers with bullet belts strapped around their waist were out of town visiting landowners.

e. People wearing buri hats were tenants, as land owners wore fedora hats.

f. Women wearing kimonas in the markets were Tagalas.

g. Women wearing wrapped around patadyong were most likely Muslims.

 The Progressive Little Town

Mr. Ernesto Corcino, a friend and historian, wrote in “Davao History: An Overview” (Region XI Historical Convention, Sept. 17-18 1993):

…large quantities of products for export brought
Davao into the arena of foreign trade; engines
and vehicles were introduced, roads opened up
and large stores of varying commodities were
established as Filipino migrants began to increase…

Outside Davao (Toril), the transportation was provided mostly by calesas pulled by different colored horses. In the city, old model Ford cars provided transportation, picking up passengers and delivering them to their doorsteps, in addition to the lone yellow-painted busline (Dabusco) that plied the San Pedro-Sta. Ana route. While before, Bagobos came to town on horses, it was now a common sight to see Bagobos, in their native ,mire, hiring cars and going around the city at leisure. The biggest bill at this time was the twenty peso (P20.00) bill on which Mt. Mayon was printed and people, kidding each other, would say, “de-bulkan ang kuarta niyan“, meaning one was rich and had plenty of money.

The two main shopping areas were San Pedro Street and Sta. Ana. San Pedro was an upper class shopping area. Here were bazaars owned by Bombays. Indians from Bombay, ( Utomal), Syrians and Lebanese (Borgailys) could be found selling items from perfumes to textiles to horse saddles. The Chinese restaurants were Kwong Lee and Asia, and the Chinese tailoring shops were Chiew Ning and Centro de Modas. The Macau Chinese were famous tailors while the Cantonese were famous for their cuisine.

There were a few Batangueno stores with peddlers selling kulambo (mosquito nets)and other Filipino stores (Amigleos). A Manila Branch, German-owned gun store sold double-barreled shotguns, a favorite of the farmers and the natives.

There were also Japanese establishments: A restaurant called Mikasa. A Hotel, Kashiwara, Bazaar Takeuchi, and the biggest Osaka bazaar, selling all Japanese goods whose quality was looked down upon.

There were Japanese barbershops where pictures of different haircuts were hanged on the wall and the customer was given a stick, to point at the desired haircut to be done. Some barbershops had Japanese women barbers. Japanese food parlors specialized in “Mongo con hielo” and Japanese “Manjo“. Near Legazpi was a theater called the Liberty where, outside . at night, vendors sold durian at twenty centavos. Lanzones were sold not by the kilo but by containers called bagta.

The other commercial area was Sta. Ana. The wholesale stores there were then considered far from the town. Drivers picking up passengers in Sta. Ana would cry out “Dabaw, Dabaw” for San Pedro-bound passengers.

Between San Pedro and Sta. Ana was a stretch of nipa-, covered swamps from the shores at Boulevard to the Sta. Ana Elementary School up to the vicinity of San Pedro hospital. Here mangrove trees grew and Davao residents cut their Christmas trees from these areas. Christmas trees were made by wrapping their branches with green crepe papers. At Uyanguren Street, near the swamps, mangrove crabs could be seen crossing the street.

 The Market

The market near the PLDT-Aldevinco-BoyScout building under acacia trees was a center of daily interaction, particularly between the Visayans (mostly from Cebu) and the Tagalogs (mostly from Cavite).

Here the Visayans learned Tagalog and Tagalogs learned Visayan from actual practice. With both Visayans and Tagalogs not speaking correctly, many hilarious incidents occured:

a. A Cebuano buying “siopao” wanted to know what was inside the dough “pork or chicken”and asked “Ano ang ilalim nito” ? and the Tagalog answered “papel

b. A maid was sent to market for the first time to buy one kilo of “matambaca” and came back with two “eye balls” of a cow, apologizing for having bought only two because “wala na talaga

c . A Tagalog tindera was surprised when a Visayan wanted to buy fifty centavos of “panakut” (literal meaning, something frightful).

d. A Visayan maid in a Dabawenyo home was bewildered when told to “Kamanga ang baso“. Kamang in Dabaw is “get” and in Visayan “crawl“.

These hilarious incidents of Visayans and Tagalogs crossbreeding Visayan and Tagalog words like as pagumangkin and inimin gave birth to the pre-war Davao phrase “Tagalog sa Mat:” when referring to a non-Tagalog speaking wrong Filipino.

                            The Bagobos in Guianga

     Seventeen kilometers away from the City is Tugbok, the seat of government of the Guianga district. It is here where my father, as Deputy Mayor, held daily office.

    During vacation time I rode with him to his office and stayed there the whole day. Here I had my first contact with the Bagobos, whose children later became my friends. They came to seek my father’s advice and mostly to register their newly born children. It was only then that I knew that many of them at that time still did not have a family name.

A couple came to register their new-born child and when asked for the name they said “Landigan” (somehow the term “Salading” is associated with a clothesline that snapped at the time the baby was being born) and when asked for “appeledo” (family name) they said “Bagobo”. My father explained to the couple the necessity of having a family name and suggested that the father’s name from then on would be the family name. The father’s name was Llawan so the child became Ladingan Llawan.

Remembering that incident helped us understand why our old Bagobo friends called and shouted at my father from a distance with greetings of “Lizada! Kamusta Kaw?”.

 

Education

 

My parents were brought up under the Spanish system of education in which foremost of all is “respect for the elders”. We were never allowed to answer back when reprimanded. We were always told to “listen to your parents”. Now psychologists and educators tell us always to listen to our children.

When visitors arrived we were all told to go to our room and not to go out to the sala for that would be an intrusion into adult conversation. Offenses were penalized by making us kneel at the altar for a few minutes.

In school, the same was true. We were told to kneel in from of the class but with a variation. This time we knelt with outstretched arms and at times with a book on each palm.

At school, the bell was rung twice. The first was the warning bell before forming the line. The second bell was for lining up. When the first bell was rung (warning bell), wherever the student was and whatever he was doing, he had to stop. All froze’ until the second bell was rung.

 

The Outskirts of the Town

 

Beyond San Roque was the sparsely inhabited area of Bajada. It was composed of rolling open hills of cogon where stood a tall molave tree. the favorite resting place of the wild doves (balud). The Cabaguio or Jereza Subdivision was a field of grass and trees. Across from the Regional Hospital was the building of the military trainees, a military training camp.’ In front of the present Carmelite Convent (Lanang Golf and Country Club) was the small ranch and coconut farm of the Roscoms.

At kilometer seven (Alcantara and Beach Club) was our farm. ‘Here there were patches of second growth forests where monkeys and wild chicken could be found. Blue and white kingfishers, yellow and black orioles, grey and brown wild doves, woodpeckers, black crows and hawks. During moonless nights we would go through the farmlands to the sea, bringing lighted torches made out of bundled dried coconut leaves, to catch fish and crabs and to pick up shellfish from the ebbing tide waters. Between the Insular Hotel and the farm was a stream shaded by mangrove trees, a spawning ground of many fish.

 

Landlord and Tenants

 

Land was abundant in Davao. My aunt returned to the government forty hectares of land in Tuganay, which she could not attend to. It is now a prosperous fishpond. Marapangi was where grandfather gave several hectares of his land to tenants. Farmowners and tenants came from the extended families of many landowners. The “Engkargado” or farm caretaker represented the owner in the farm. He was his extension.

During fiestas, relatives were invited to the farm. Invitations involved the father, mother, children and yayas. Here we met uncles, aunties, cousins and yayas. Cooking was done outside the house by the families of the tenants whose whole families were also present. There was non-stop cooking. They cooked as the guests arrived and guests came for the whole day. However, I noticed that many didn’t stay long. They came, ate and went away. I found out later that the culture of the time (the custumbre or ugali) was to visit all the relatives in the area whenever you were around. You may not have been invited but you were expected to visit. This practice is still true in some other areas. In the 1960s we resided in Toril and and during one of the fiestas we cooked one half sack of rice for relatives and friends who dropped by to say “hello”.

 

The Japanese in Davao

 

Dr. Serafin Quiason, in his article “The Japanese Colony n Davao” (Historical Convention in Davao 1993), wrote:

The Japanese colony in Davao, is the first colony
that the Japanese developed in South East Asia.
This is the only one in South East Asia which the
Japanese settled and developed and it was here
in Davao.

A Japanese report in 1934 stated that Japanese corporations held about 25,086 hectares of agricultural land; :9,072 of which were leased by private individuals. One of these leased lands was that of my grandfather in Marapangi. Others belonged to our relatives in Daliao, Toril, Bangkal Heights and Mulig. Japanese farmers were highly industrious, innovative; and dedicated to the farm. Their farmhouses were like their homes in Japan, low and unpainted, built in the middle of an abaca field away from the road, surrounded with gardens of flowery. and fruit trees and, whenever possible, near a river. Near their homes was a vegetable garden tilled by the wife who pickled the excess harvest and kept it in stock. Near the kitchen, out in the yard, was a barrel cut in half sitting on a low concrete and with firewood underneath, ready to heat the water for the daily afternoon bath.

Accustomed to the concept of a “neighborhood association”, they saw to it that they were always within the reach of other Japanese farmers and homes. In areas where they were separated by a river, they put up hanging bridges using cables and wooden planks for an aerial pathwalk. thus assuring them of ready access to their homes. Dr. Josefa of the of the UP Asian Studies wrote in her paper on the Japanese in the Philippines:

It is of common belief that Japanese plantations
are so linked with each other as to facilitate not
only close common communication but quick
concentration of Japanese subjects upon a
moment’s notice…

In Japanese farms, Japanese tradition was observed. In my grandfather’s farm, Japanese women wore kimonos and working clothes, tilling the garden with their infant strapped to their back sleeping soundly. Japanese tenants hired Filipino laborers and worked with them. Japanese discipline and orderliness were followed at the work site. The Japanese and and the laborers started their work at the sound of the bell. Rest at ten in the morning was also announced by the bell as well as the time to smoke, drink or eat. Resumption of work was also signalled by the bell.

Farmers came to town only when necessary, like when giving the landlords their share of the sale of the abaca hemp, buying supplies at Japanese cooperative stores, or visiting the headquarters of the Japanese Associations for news from home. Not only did they keep Japanese traditions but they also kept Japanese dogs on their farms.

Japanese records show that in 1939 there were 17,000 Japanese residents in Davao. The well-planned community life was shown by the Japanese daily publications, Japanese radio programs, the presence of Shinto and Buddhist temples, Japanese cooperatives, and the strong Japanese Association.

Mintal, in the Guianga district, looked like a small Japanese town. Japanese residents dominated the town. Japanese stores lined the street while a big Japanese hospital. amicst pine trees, stood in front of the huge campus of the Japanese school. In the nearby places were irrigated Japanese plantations. The town was clean and well kept. Japanese school boys wore red caps, and girls dressed in blue and white.

Gloria Dabbay, in her book. Davao City: its History and Progress; quoted President Manuel Quezon, who observed that,

…The Japanese have developed these lands that
were undeveloped before. They have taught us
how to have modern plantations. If the Filipinos
should take advantage of what we can learn from
what the Japanese are doing here, the coming of
Japanese to Davao. instead of being evil, would
be a blessing…

Yet W. J. Anderson, in his book entitled The Philippine Problem pictured Davao as a part of the Philippine territory which the Japanese”… are running practically as an independent state.”

 

Conclusion: The Changing Images of Davao

 

Davao grew from a primitive wild land of the pre-Spanish times to the object of land grants made by the Spaniards to interested settlers, to the beneficiaries of infrastructures developed by the Americans. All of these contributed to the sustained growth of Davao. Davao was a little city in the thirties but worth looking at as a model today in the nineties.

The city has been able to cope well with the process of growth. Bolton and other streets had deep canals serving as drainage for the almost nightly rain. Many “dalag” were found in the canals, which is the reason why Dabawenyos did not have a very great liking for them. The sanitary inspector made his round everyday, looking at the surroundings and calling the attention of residents to garbage in their yards.

The garbage trucks never missed their nightly rounds for collecting garbage. Policemen with clubs patroled the streets day and night. Water trucks went around the dusty roads sprinkling water, on them. A vehicle equipped with a fumigating machine went around fumigating stagnant waters, which were the breeding places for mosquitos and other insects. Regular health nurses visited schools to vaccinate children and immunize them from diseases.

Outside the city, along the roads to nearby districts, were camineros dressed in red, cutting the grass and cleaning their designated areas of the road everyday. The caminero never left his post.

The parks beside the Sanguniang Panglunsod were immaculately clean. Their benches were painted white and they had well maintained swings and see-saws, well trimmed hedges, and flowers. They were well lighted.

There were no car watchers and no street vendors. Very seldom did we see out-of-school children.

The constabulary, the policemen, and the Sanitary Inspector were looked up to with respect. People were aware of the rule of law. Even bicycle riders traveled at night with lighted flashlights, as required, and did not allow back riders since they were prohibited.

The many gifts of nature like the little streams at Jacinto, Ateneo, Uyanguren and at the back of Claveria; at Sasa, Belisario, Talomo, and Agdao were left undisturbed, allowing them to empty their waters into the sea. Almost all these are now covered and converted to subdivision lots.

Today, however, the many mangroves by the shores of the city, where fish used to spawn are now industrial places where factories one disposing their wastes into the sea.

The once peaceful and clean beaches of the thirties are now full of socially uncaring people, living in unsanitary conditions. Beaches are now converted into deplorable slums.

The forests of the thirties that gave Davao its evening rain, treat provided it with its cool breeze, and that sheltered many kinds of birds are now bald fields exposed to the sun. All the God-given gifts of nature existing then in the thirties were, in a wink of an eye, destroyed in the early fifties.

Davao in the thirties is now but a memory. The little town is now a big city. “Perhaps we should ask ourselves”what price was paid for its development” and “what are the choices of having another Davao-of-the-thirties in the future?”